The metabolic fate of nitric oxide (NO) released from nitroaspirin, benzoic acid, 2-(acetyloxy)-3-[(nitrooxy)methyl]phenyl ester (NCX 4016), the lead compound of a new class of NO-releasing non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NO-NSAIDs), has been studied in the rat following p.o. and i.p. administration of 100 mg/kg, by monitoring in plasma the bioactive storage forms of NO (S-nitrosothiols, RS-NO) and its oxidation products (nitrites/nitrates, NOx) by a chemiluminescent assay. In parallel, plasma was analyzed for unchanged drug and metabolites by reverse-phase HPLC. In orally treated rats, no unchanged drug is observed in the 0-24 h interval post-dosing, but only salicylic acid (SA), NOx and RS-NO. The time-course of SA formation parallels that of plasma NOx (plateau after 6 h). Nitrosothiols in plasma are detectable at 1 h, peak at 4 h post-administration, and decline thereafter. The results relative to i.p. administration show a more pronounced and rapid NO delivery (peak of both NOx and RS-NO at 1 h and plateau between 1 and 2 h), still coincident with the peak of SA, and the presence in plasma of NCX 4015 (a metabolite of NCX 4016 which still bears the nitrate function). In myocardial tissue from p.o. treated rats, no drug or metabolites were ever detected, and the NOx levels were always in the range of the controls. Conversely, following i.p. treatment, we observed a rapid compartmentalization within the heart of the unchanged drug, which rapidly disappears in favour of its breakdown products NCX 4015 and SA, with a concomitant rise in myocardial NOx levels up to 2 h. To check the stability of NCX 4016 in the acidic gastric milieu and to explain the different distribution of the drug following p.o. or i.p. administration, the gastric content of the orally-treated animals at different post-dosing times was analysed by HPLC. The unchanged drug was detected up to 8 h post-dosing (levels slowly decreased with time), and the only metabolite to be detected was the O-deacetylated derivative (NCX 4023), which was present in low concentrations up to 4 h post-dosing. This indicates that NCX 4016 does not undergo biotransformation in the upper part of gastrointestinal tract (no direct release of NO in this district) and that the stomach acts as a reservoir for the drug.